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The hidden perspective David Owen

The hidden perspective By David Owen

The hidden perspective by David Owen


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Condition - Like New
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Summary

In The Hidden Perspective David Owen examines how far the secret military conversations - instigated by Foreign Secretary Edward Grey - that took place between the British and the French in the years before WWI went to preventing of the establishment of a separate alliance with Germany that might have prevented the conflict.

The hidden perspective Summary

The hidden perspective by David Owen

Within weeks of taking office in December 1905, British Prime Minister Henry Campbell-Bannerman and his Foreign Minister Edward Grey agreed to allow the General Staff to enter detailed talks with their French counterparts about sending an expeditionary force to France in the event of a German attack. Neither the Cabinet or Parliament were informed. Grey did not even inform Asquith, Campbell-Bannerman's successor as Prime Minister, until 1911, three years after he had assumed office. In the autumn of that year there were two stormy Cabinet meetings during which the details of the military conversations were at last revealed. The following spring Viscount Haldane, the Secretary for War, failed to slow Germany's rapid naval expansion on a mission to Berlin, despite Harcourt, the Colonial Secretary, advocating a land deal for Germany in Africa as an incentive. Recent historical evidence has shown that by July 1914, under pressure to compromise with Germany from Harcourt and Haldane, Grey had relented and a further attempt to negotiate was underway when the war started. All this time there was a hidden perspective of key diplomats alongside Grey Foreign Office. Together - and in some ways prescient of the build-up to the Iraq conflict in 2003 - they contributed to a feeling that there was a moral commitment to send troops to the continent. The Hidden Perspective shows how the 'mind frame' in the Foreign Office influenced political decision making and sentiment. Lord Owen's conclusion as a former Foreign Secretary, analysing the diplomacy and naval strategy, are that better handled at various stages over those eight years the carnage of the First World War was not inevitable and could even have been prevented altogether.

The hidden perspective Reviews

David Owen's book should be essential reading for contemporary statesmen. --Henry Kissinger

About David Owen

David Owen (Lord Owen) was elected as a Labour MP in his home city of Plymouth in 1966 and served as Foreign Secretary under James Callaghan from 1977 until 1979. He co-founded and went on to lead the Social Democratic Party (SDP) and is now an Independent Social Democrat in the Lords. He is the author of In Sickness and In Power - Illness in Heads of Government during the last 100 years, The Hubris Syndrome, Balkan Odyssey, and the autobiography Time to Declare.

Additional information

GOR008108238
9781908323668
1908323663
The hidden perspective by David Owen
Used - Like New
Hardback
Haus Publishing
20140612
262
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
The book has been read, but looks new. The book cover has no visible wear, and the dust jacket is included if applicable. No missing or damaged pages, no tears, possible very minimal creasing, no underlining or highlighting of text, and no writing in the margins

Customer Reviews - The hidden perspective